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Further acknowledging a mistake made, the Dallas Mavericks took another step to undo the infamous Luka Dončić trade.

The Mavericks have reportedly shipped the headliner of that deal, forward-center Anthony Davis, to the Washington Wizards.

The deal generates interesting implications, so how do we make sense of what this means? Here are grades for the Mavericks-Wizards Anthony Davis trade:

Anthony Davis trade grades

Washington Wizards

This really is intriguing. Washington has been in a rebuild for the better part of the last decade, but coach Brian Keefe has shown this season that he can get flashes of production from an incredibly young roster. In fact, the team’s starting lineup during a Jan. 24 loss against the Hornets had an average age of 20.64 years, the youngest average age of a starting lineup since the NBA began tracking that data in 1970-71, according to Elias.

But the Wizards have won only 13 games, tied for fewest in the East. This was a team that desperately needed steady, veteran leadership, yes, but is this the most effective way to elevate the team out of a rebuild? Paired with the trade that shipped Trae Young to Washington, the Wizards now have a pair of veterans with 14 combined All-Star selections. But there’s some significant risk here.

Davis played just 29 games for the Mavericks since the February 2025 trade and has faced constant injury concerns throughout his career. In fact, he’s currently sidelined with a left-hand issue and appears to be a few weeks away from a return. Similarly, Young is out with a sprained right knee and bruised quadriceps.

For these deals to be fruitful, Davis and Young need to be healthy and available. But they also have to gel. The Wizards rank dead last in net rating (-10.7) and second-to-last in both offensive rating (109.3) and defensive rating (120.0). Young is a defensive liability. Davis (20.4 points, 11.1 rebounds and 2.8 assists per game) should provide stability on both ends.

Keefe will need to get Davis, 32, and Young, 27, to buy in and lead Washington’s young players. This was certainly a team that needed to make calculated moves. But if it doesn’t work, the Wizards could continue to find themselves at the bottom of the standings.

One way the Wizards mitigated some risk in this deal is that none of the draft picks they traded were their own. So if Washington remains in the lottery, those picks will stay with the team.

Grade: B

Dallas Mavericks

It was clear the fit with Davis was never seamless. Perhaps, in an alternate universe in which star point guard Kyrie Irving doesn’t tear his anterior cruciate ligament, the Mavericks could’ve sustained the post-Dončić era.

But that’s not reality and the Mavericks are paying for the sins of former general manager Nico Harrison. Interim co-GMs Michael Finley and Matt Riccardi made this deal to make the best of a tough situation. The franchise saw the recent stellar play of 19-year-old rookie Cooper Flagg and understood that it needs to build around him. This is something that is going to take years. It’s not an enviable position, and the draft picks coming back seemingly won’t be top-of-draft selections.

Despite moments of competitive play, Dallas has lost five consecutive games and probably understood that a pathway toward the play-in picture was doubtful. The Mavericks are sitting at 19-31 and seemingly believe that it’s better to admit a mistake than compound it. Put another way: the Mavericks considered Davis to be a sunk cost, especially considering that he was set to make $112.6 million through the 2026-27 season, with a $62.8 million player option for 2027-28.

This does provide some financial flexibility for Dallas to be more aggressive with its roster construction.

Dallas also holds its own 2026 first-rounder. This is a draft loaded with talent at the top, so the Mavericks could even package their new draft capital to move up and target a player of their choosing.

Davis was barely playing for the Mavericks. Dallas at least squeezed as much value as possible out of him.

Grade: C+

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

LIVIGNO, Italy – Mary Carillo will host NBC’s 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics opening ceremony coverage after original host Savannah Guthrie stepped down, as her mother Nancy remains missing.

Carillo and Terry Gannon, who was originally Guthrie’s co-host for the ceremony, will anchor the show, which starts at 2 p.m. ET on Friday, Feb. 6.

Nancy Guthrie has been missing for an unknown amount of time from her Arizona home. A Feb. 1 911 call reported her absence. Authorities believe she ‘was taken.’ TMZ and a local CBS affiliate reported that their news outlets received ransom notes, but authorities have not verified their authenticity.

Savannah Guthrie hosted the Thanksgiving Day parade in November and was part of the opening ceremony coverage two years ago at the Summer Games in Paris.

‘Savannah will not be joining us at the Olympics as she focuses on being with her family during this difficult time,’ an NBC spokesperson told USA TODAY in a statement on Feb. 3.

NBC has its talent resources spread heading into the weekend. The network is airing Super Bowl 60 on Feb. 8, with Mike Tirico – the typical Olympics primetime host – on the call. His presence in northern California, along with others capable of performing the job such as Maria Taylor, complicated matters for NBC.

Tirico will travel to Milan and anchor the primetime coverage from there after the Super Bowl.

Carillo lived for two years in Milan as a child, according to NBC. She hosted three closing ceremonies, the most recent being Rio in 2016. Shaun White will be in the booth for the parade of athletes, as previously announced.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

On Wednesday, Athletes Unlimited Softball League (AUSL) announced it signed Pickens to the league’s first NIL deal. As part of the partnership, the ace will help raise awareness about the AUSL through marketing and social media posts. The pro softball league says the signing is a ‘strategic move’ to connect college softball to the pro level.“When I was growing up, I didn’t really see [pro] softball … I watched the Olympics, but outside of college, I didn’t really think there was an option to go pro,” Pickens said via release. “It’s been just a few years, and now everyone’s dream is to go to AUSL and continue their softball career.”

Pickens made college history last season when she threw the fastest pitch ever recorded.

On March 24, 2025, Pickens threw a 78.2 mph pitch against Arkansas. It broke a previous record held by Monica Abbott. Two months later, on May 24, 2025, the Tennessee pitcher broke her own record with a 79.4 mph pitch to Nebraska’s Jordy Frahm. Pickens finished her junior season with Tennessee with a 25-11 record, 306 strikeouts and a 1.17 ERA.The Lady Volunteers’ season begins on Thursday, Feb. 5, against BYU in the NFCA Leadoff Classic in Clearwater, Florida. The 2026 season for AUSL begins June 9, 2026.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

For at least two decades, former Amazon executive Dave Clark ended his work week the same way: a standing Friday date night with his wife, Leigh Anne.

Over dinner, the Clarks would talk through the “peak and pit” of their weeks. The ritual often revolved around Amazon, where Clark played a central role in building the logistics infrastructure that helped launch the e-commerce era.

During those years, Leigh Anne was a sounding board for her husband. In the process, she had a front-row seat to Amazon’s growth from what she called “a baby to a behemoth.”

By the time Clark left Amazon in 2022, he was CEO of the Worldwide Consumer division and one of billionaire founder Jeff Bezos’ top lieutenants.

Dave Clark at Auger headquarters Monday.David Jaewon Oh for NBC News

But these days, Fridays for the Clarks look very different.

Their dinner date has morphed into afternoon cocktails — a bourbon with Diet Coke for her and a Manhattan for him. And the conversation isn’t focused on Amazon anymore. It’s about Auger, the supply-chain startup they run together.

In their first joint interview from Auger’s Seattle office, the Clarks described how their marriage and complementary skill sets are shaping the company.

“We’ve been together for so long that we kind of just read each other’s minds,” Leigh Anne said. Working together, she said, “felt like a natural fit.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

It’s finally time to start your engines, NASCAR fans.

The 2026 season begins Monday night when Cup Series drivers take the green flag for the Cook Out Clash exhibition race at Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The race was originally scheduled for Sunday, but winter weather caused it to be postponed.

The 200-lap race will take place on the short track inside the stadium that hosts Winston-Salem State University football games. Twenty-three drivers will participate in the main event, following a Last Chance Qualifier immediately before the Cook Out Clash.

While no points will be awarded and the race has no effect on the 2026 season standings, there is prize money to be won (the total purse in 2025 was $3,002,500). The event also provides drivers a chance to get reacclimated to race conditions before the action shifts to Daytona International Speedway and the iconic Daytona 500 on Feb. 15.

Bubba Wallace suffers minor spin out lap 53

It’s been a tough go for most racers so far. In fact, for many of the drivers, positions haven’t changed from where we started. However, we finally got our first real shakeup as a small bump caused Bubba Wallace to suffer a minor spin out.

The setback was nothing serious as Wallace was back in the race just moments later, but it was the first major shakeup in the race since it started. Kyle Larson remains out in front with a solid lead more than a quarter of the way through the race.

Moment of silence for Greg Biffle prior to race

Prior to Wednesday’s race, the crowd at Winston-Salem in North Carolina had a moment of silence in honor of Greg Biffle who died in a plane crash on December 18, 2025 in North Carolina.

The moment of silence was followed up with motivational speeches and a rendition of The Star-Spangled Banner from officers in the Winston-Salem police department.

The race begins next.

What time is the NASCAR Cook Out Clash?

The 2026 Cook Out Clash is scheduled for Wednesday, Feb. 4 at 6 p.m. ET.

It will be preceded by practice sessions and qualifying beginning at 11 a.m. ET, a Last Chance Qualifier at 4:30 p.m. ET and a pre-race show at 5:30 p.m. ET.

What TV channel is the NASCAR Cook Out Clash on?

The 2026 Cook Out Clash will be televised nationally on FOX at 6 p.m. ET on Wednesday, Feb. 4.

Practice and qualifying will be televised live on FS2 Wednesday at 11 a.m. ET. The Last Chance Qualifier can be seen on FOX and HBO Max at 4:30 p.m. ET.

Will there be a live stream of the NASCAR Cook Out Clash?

The 2026 Cook Out Clash can be streamed on FoxSports.com and the Fox Sports app. All NASCAR races on Fox or FS1 can also be streamed on Fubo, which is offering a free trial.

Stream the Cook Out Clash on Fubo

How do drivers advance to the NASCAR Cook Out Clash

The 20 fastest drivers in qualifying will advance to the main event. The remaining 18 drivers will fight for two transfer spots in the Last Chance Qualifier. The top two finishers in the LCQ will advance to the main event, with a provisional reserved for the driver who finished highest in 2025 driver points that did not otherwise advance.

NASCAR Cook Out Clash: How to watch

Date: Wednesday, Feb. 4
Location: Bowman Gray Stadium (Winston-Salem, North Carolina)
Time: 6 p.m. ET
TV channel: Fox
Streaming: FoxSports.com, Fubo

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Two Eastern Conference franchises trying to emerge from NBA play-in status are exchanging valuable backcourt pieces in a multi-team move involving the defending NBA champions ahead of the 2026 NBA trade deadline.

The Chicago Bulls are trading guards Coby White and Mike Conley to the Charlotte Hornets in exchange for guard Collin Sexton, forward Ousmane Dieng and three second-round picks, according to an ESPN report on Wednesday, Feb. 4. The three-team trade also includes multiple transactions after the Bulls acquired Conley in a Feb. 3 deal with the Timberwolves and Dieng came to the Hornets via the Oklahoma City Thunder. Mason Plumlee will go from Charlotte to the Thunder.

White, 25, is slated to be an unrestricted free agent this offseason and joins the Hornets as they’ve surged to seven-straight wins behind a nucleus featuring rookie Kon Knueppel, LaMelo Ball and Brandon Miller. White is averaging 18.6 points, 4.7 assists and 3.7 rebounds per game in his seventh season since the Bulls drafted him with the No. 7 overall pick in 2019.

Sexton was Charlotte’s leading scorer off the bench this season and will also be an unrestricted free agent after this season. He is averaging 14.2 points and 3.7 assists per game. Conley and Plumlee could be candidates to be waived by their new teams with both on expiring contracts. Dieng will also be a restricted free agent after this season.

Coby White, Collin Sexton 3-team trade details

Bulls get: Collin Sexton, Ousmane Dieng, 3 second-round picks
Hornets get: Coby White, Mike Conley
Thunder get: Mason Plumlee

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Chris Paul’s final NBA season is being re-routed north of the border, with another stop potentially on the way.

The 40-year-old point guard was traded by the Los Angeles Clippers to the Toronto Raptors as part of a multi-team deal ahead of the 2026 NBA trade deadline, ESPN reported on Wednesday, Feb. 4. Paul will go to the Raptors, while forward Ochai Agbaji and a 2032 second-round pick will move from Toronto to the Brooklyn Nets in the transaction.

But the State Farm pitchman might not be there for long, according to multiple reports. It’s still unclear if Paul will actually report to Toronto, be included in another trade or be waived by the Raptors in the coming days. What jersey he’ll be wearing for his final NBA game will remain an ongoing subplot.

Paul signed a one-year, $3.6-million contract to return to the Clippers this past offseason and then later announced this would be his final NBA season. The Clippers then shocked the NBA in December when they sent Paul home in the wee hours of the night in the middle of a road trip as the team struggled early on this season. General Manager Lawrence Frank and coach Tyronn Lue made clear the organization intended to part ways with one of the greatest players in franchise history as reports emerged about friction involving Paul’s leadership style inside the team’s locker room.

Paul could be a veteran presence on the bench for an emerging Raptors roster led by multi-faceted forwards Brandon Ingram and Scottie Barnes, which is readying for a postseason run after emerging as one of the pleasant surprises in the Eastern Conference this year. The Raptors would become the eighth NBA team of Paul’s decorated career. He was averaging a career-low 2.9 points and 3.3 assists in 14.3 minutes over 16 games this season with the Clippers.

Agbaji is set to be a restricted free agent this offseason after being selected with the No. 14 overall pick in the 2022 NBA Draft and will get a chance to prove himself to potential suitors with the rebuilding Nets. He was initially traded to the Raptors in 2024 and saw his playing time drop significantly this season.

Chris Paul trade details

Raptors get: Chris Paul
Nets get: Ochai Agbaji, 2032 second-round pick (Toronto), cash
Clippers get: Extra roster spot, salary cap/luxury tax savings

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The New York Rangers beat the Olympic roster freeze deadline and traded the biggest player in their retool, with Artemi Panarin heading to the Los Angeles Kings.

In return, the Rangers receive forward Liam Greentree and conditional third-round (2026) and fourth-round (2028) picks, the Kings announced. The Rangers retain half of Panarin’s salary, and he received a two-year extension from Los Angeles with an $11 million cap hit.

The struggling Rangers had sent a letter to fans that that they were going to retool their roster and that it might mean saying ‘goodbye to players that have brought us and our fans great moments over the years.’

Panarin was told that the team would not be offering him a contract extension. He was in the final year of a seven-year contract averaging $11.6 million and had a full no-movement clause. Last week, they held him out of the lineup to prevent him from getting hurt as they worked out a trade.

Here are grades for the Los Angeles Kings and New York Rangers in the Artemi Panarin trade:

Los Angeles Kings: B+

The Kings need offense, ranking 28th in the league, and Panarin provides plenty, leading the Rangers every year in scoring since he arrived as a free agent in 2019. Even in a down year, he has 57 points in 52 games. Los Angeles is third in goals-against average, so a little extra boost on the scoring side could translate to more wins. That’s important with the Kings sitting one point out of a playoff spot and trying to go on a postseason run in captain Anze Kopitar’s final year. Getting the 34-year-old signed for another two years will help the Kings after Kopitar retires.

New York Rangers: C

Panarin was the Rangers’ best trade asset and the return seems low. Greentree is 20, 6-foot-3, 216 pounds and was a 2024 first-round pick. He had 119 points last season with the Windsor (Ontario) Spitfires. But there was no first-round pick in the deal. The third-rounder can move to a second if the Kings win a playoff round and a fourth-rounder comes into play if they win two rounds. Panarin had to choose where he went, so that limited the Rangers’ options. Also hurting their return: New York made clear it was moving him and he was a pending unrestricted free agent.

Devils acquire Nick Bjugstad

The New Jersey Devils acquired bottom-six forward Nick Bjugstad from the St. Louis Blues for forward Thomas Bordeleau and a conditional fourth-round pick.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The NBA trading deadline is upon us.

It was a quiet leadup to the final days before the Thursday, Feb. 5 deadline at 3 p.m. ET, with only one trade in the months of October, November, December and January. Compare that to last season, when there were five over that span.

Much of the league is watching the developments in Milwaukee concerning Giannis Antetokounmpo’s future with the Bucks, though action has started to pick up in recent days.

Keep track of every single trade executed during 2025-26 season below:

2025-26 NBA trade tracker

Lonzo Ball traded (Feb. 4)

Lonzo Ball
Two second round picks

Jock Landale

Cleveland Cavaliers receive

Two second-round picks

Chris Paul gets moved in three team deal (Feb. 4)

Vanja Marinkovic (draft rights via ESPN)

Ochai Agbaji
Second-round pick

Chris Paul

Mike Conley, Coby White traded (Feb. 4)

Charlotte Hornets receive

Mike Conley
Coby White
2029 second-round pick (better pick from Atlanta or Miami)

Collin Sexton
Ousmane Dieng
2029 and two 2031 second-round picks

Sixers move Jared McCain (Feb. 4)

Oklahoma City Thunder receives

Jared McCain

2026 first-round pick (from HOU)
2027 second-round pick (most favorable of picks from OKC/HOU/IND/MIA)
Two 2028 second-round picks (from OKC, MIL)

Mavericks ship Anthony Davis to Wizards (Feb. 4)

Dallas Mavericks receive:

Khris Middleton
AJ Johnson
Malaki Branham
Marvin Bagley III
2026 first-round pick (from OKC)
2030 first-round pick (from GS, top-20 protected)
2026 second-round pick (from PHX)
2027 second-round pick (from CHI)
2029 second-round pick (from HOU)

Washington Wizards receive:

Anthony Davis
Jaden Hardy
D’Angelo Russell
Dante Exum

Bulls move on from Nikola Vučević (Feb. 3)

Boston Celtics receive

Nikola Vučević
Second-round draft pick

Chicago Bulls receive

Anfernee Simons
Second-round draft pick

Jaden Ivey, Mike Conley Jr. on move in three-team deal (Feb. 3)

Detroit Pistons receive

Dario Šarić (from the Bulls)
Kevin Huerter (from the Bulls)

Chicago Bulls receive

Jaden Ivey (from Pistons)
Mike Conley Jr. (from Timberwolves)

Minnesota Timberwolves receive

2026 first-round protected pick swap (from Pistons)

Grizzlies move on from Jaren Jackson Jr. (Feb. 3)

Utah Jazz receive

Jaren Jackson Jr.
John Konchar
Jock Landale
Vince Williams Jr.

Memphis Grizzlies receive

Three first-round draft picks
Walter Clayton
Kyle Anderson
Taylor Hendricks
Georges Niang

Trade details | Trade grades

Hawks move on from Vít Krejčí (Feb. 1)

Portland Trail Blazers receive

Vít Krejčí

Atlanta Hawks receive

Duop Reath
2027 second-round pick (via Hawks)
2030 second-round pick (via Knicks)

Cavaliers move on from De’Andre Hunter (Feb. 1)

Sacramento Kings receive

De’Andre Hunter (from Cavaliers)

Cleveland Cavaliers receive

Keon Ellis (from Kings)
Dennis Schröder (from Kings)
Emanuel Miller (from Bulls)

Chicago Bulls receive

Dario Šarić (from Kings)
2027 second-round pick (via Nuggets)
2029 second-round pick (via Kings)

Hawks move on from Trae Young (Jan. 9)

Washington Wizards receive

Trae Young

Atlanta Hawks receive

CJ McCollum
Corey Kispert

Trade details | Winners and losers

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Count Hall of Fame wide receiver Terrell Owens among those who believe former New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick and current team owner Robert Kraft should have been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Owens opined Belichick and Kraft had been ‘snubbed’ amid reports that neither was chosen for enshrinement as part of the Hall of Fame’s Class of 2026.

‘Obviously, it’s something personal about why guys aren’t getting in when they’re supposed to be,’ Owens told USA TODAY Sports in an interview ahead of Super Bowl 60.

Owens seemed particularly bothered by Belichick’s non-inclusion. He brought up the coach’s eight career Super Bowl wins – six with the New England Patriots and two as an assistant with the New York Giants – to showcase the greatness of the legendary coach.

That’s why Owens believes ‘personal feelings’ got in the way of Belichick’s selection, comparing it to his own experience as a third-ballot Hall of Famer.

‘Whether you like the guy or not, it’s not about likeability. It’s not a popularity contest. It’s not the Pro Bowl,’ Owens lamented. ‘This is something very iconic, prestigious. This is something a lot of people aspire to have [as] part of their accomplishments.’

Owens also believes the first-ballot omission of Belichick, as well as Kraft’s most recent failure to earn enshrinement, will create an interesting dynamic when Tom Brady becomes eligible for the Hall of Fame ballot.

‘You can’t put Tom Brady in first ballot if you don’t put those two in first ballot,’ Owens said, referencing Belichick and Kraft. ‘Because there’s no Tom Brady without Bill Belichick. There’s no Tom Brady without Robert Kraft. Those guys obviously put him on the map. Those things go hand-in-hand.’

Brady – a seven-time Super Bowl winner and the NFL’s all-time leader in passing yards and passing touchdowns – won’t be eligible for induction into the Hall of Fame until 2028.

It will be interesting to see if the Pro Football Hall of Fame amends its voting process at all before then, after the selection committee came under heat for Belichick’s reported omission.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY